BCHCODE08CH02
BCHCODE08CH02
BCHCODE08CH02
Cargo containment
2.1 General
2.1.3 Where it is intended to transport more than one substance, the re-
quirements for ship survival of damage should correspond to the most dan-
gerous substance, but the cargo containment need only conform to the
specified minimum requirements for the chemicals taken individually.
*
The provisions of chapter 2 of the IBC Code, if satisfied in their entirety, may be applied as
an alternative to part A.
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BCH Code – Chapter II
2.2.1 General: Ships subject to this Code may be assigned the minimum
freeboard permitted by the International Convention on Load Lines, 1966.
The additional requirements in 2.2.4, taking into account any empty or
partially filled tank as well as the specific gravities of cargoes to be carried,
however, should govern the allowed operating draught for any actual
condition of loading. To this end, all ships engaged in the transport of
chemicals in bulk should be supplied with loading and stability manuals for
the information and guidance of the master. These manuals should contain
details concerning the loaded conditions of full and empty or partially empty
tanks, the position of these tanks in the ship, the specific gravities of the
various parcels of cargoes carried, and any ballast arrangements in critical
conditions of loading. Provisions for evaluating other conditions of loading
should be contained in the manuals.
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BCH Code – Chapter II
(b) Stranding
For 0.3L from Any other part
the forward of ship
perpendicular
of ship
L L
(i) Longitudinal extent: or 5 m,
10 10
whichever is less
B
(ii) Transverse extent: or 10.0 m, 5m
6
whichever is less
B
(iii) Vertical extent or 6 m, whichever is less
from the baseline: 15
where: L and B, in metres, for any part of the ship and perpendicular
are as defined in regulation 3 of the International Conven-
tion on Load Lines, 1966
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BCH Code – Chapter II
(b) The angle of heel in the final condition of flooding should not
exceed 158, except that, if no part of the deck is immersed, an
angle of heel up to 178 may be accepted. For ships less than 150
m in length, the Administration may accept an angle of heel not
exceeding 258 provided it is positively shown that a lesser limit is
not reasonably obtainable, and that all other provisions stated
in 2.2.3(a) are complied with.
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BCH Code – Chapter II
(i) General
No special requirements.
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BCH Code – Chapter II
2.2.5 Special considerations for small ships: In the case of small ships
intended for the carriage of cargoes requiring type 1 or type 2 containment
which do not comply in all respects with the requirements in 2.2.4(a)(ii)
and 2.2.4(b)(ii) above, special dispensations may only be considered by the
Administration where alternative measures can be taken which maintain the
same degree of safety. In the approval of the design of a ship for which a
dispensation has been granted, the nature of the alternative measures
prescribed should be clearly stated and be available to the Administration in
the countries the ship will visit and any such dispensation should be duly
noted on the certificate (1.6).
B — TANK TYPES
2.3 Installation
2.3.1 Integral tank: A cargo-containment envelope which forms part of the
ship’s hull and may be stressed in the same manner and by the same loads
which stress the contiguous hull structure. An integral tank is essential to the
structural completeness of the ship’s hull.
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BCH Code – Chapter II
C — SHIP ARRANGEMENTS
2.6.4 A cargo subject to the provisions of the Code should not be stowed
either in the fore or aft peak tanks.
*
See the Recommendation on uniform interpretation of the application of 2.7.1 and 2.7.3 of
the Bulk Chemical Code to existing chemical tankers (p.95).
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BCH Code – Chapter II
2.7.3 Doors and air ports in the accommodation should be located on the
house sides at least L/25* and not less than 3 m aft of the forward end of the
house and the cargo-tank area. This distance, however, need not exceed 5 m.
Port lights located on the forward bulkhead or along the house sides within
the limits specified above should be of the fixed type. Wheelhouse windows
and wheelhouse doors may be located within the above limits; however, they
are to be so designed that a rapid and efficient gas- and vapour-tightening of
the wheelhouse can be ensured. Bolted plates for the removal of machinery
may be fitted within the limits specified above.
2.8.5 Normal access ladders should not be fitted vertically, and should
incorporate platforms at suitable intervals.
2.8.8 For cargo pump requirements for certain products see column m{ of
the summary of minimum requirements in chapter VI.
*
L = length of the ship.
{
See second paragraph of chapter VI on page 78.
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BCH Code – Chapter II
D — CARGO TRANSFER
*
Where bow or stern loading and unloading arrangements are allowed by the
Administration the provisions of section 3.7 of the IBC Code may be used for guidance.
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BCH Code – Chapter II
2.10.3 Cargo piping should not be installed under deck between the
outboard side of the cargo-containment spaces and the skin of the ship unless
clearances required for damage protection (see 2.1 and 2.2) are maintained;
but such distances may be reduced where damage to the pipe would not
cause release of cargo, provided that the clearance required for inspection
purposes is maintained.
2.10.4 Runs of cargo piping located below the main deck may run from the
tank they serve and penetrate tank bulkheads or boundaries common to
adjacent (longitudinally or transversally) cargo tanks, ballast tanks, empty
tanks, cargo pump-rooms or pump-rooms, provided that inside the tank they
serve they are fitted with a stop valve operable from the weather deck and
provided cargo compatibility is assured in the event of piping failure. As an
exception, where a cargo tank is adjacent to a cargo pump-room, the stop
valve operable from the weather deck may be situated on the tank bulkhead
on the cargo pump-room side, provided an additional valve is fitted between
the bulkhead valve and the cargo pump.
2.10.5 In any cargo pump-room where a pump serves more than one tank, a
stop valve should be fitted in the line to each tank.
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BCH Code – Chapter II
2.10.6 Runs of cargo piping installed in pipe tunnels should also comply with
the requirements of 2.10.4 and 2.10.5. Pipe tunnels should satisfy all tank
requirements for construction, location and ventilation and electrical hazard
requirements. Cargo compatibility should be assured in the event of a piping
failure. The tunnel should not have any other openings except to the weather
deck and cargo pump-room or pump-room.
*
See second paragraph of chapter VI on page 78.
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BCH Code – Chapter II
2.12.2 Liquid and vapour hoses used for cargo transfer should be compatible
with the cargo carried and suitable for the cargo temperature.
2.12.4 Each new type of cargo hose, complete with end-fittings, should be
prototype-tested at a normal ambient temperature with 200 pressure cycles
from zero to at least twice the specified maximum working pressure. After this
cycle pressure test has been carried out, the prototype test should
demonstrate a bursting pressure of at least 5 times its specified maximum
working pressure at the extreme service temperature. Hoses used for
prototype testing should not be used for cargo service. Thereafter, before
being placed in service, each new length of cargo hose produced should be
hydrostatically tested at ambient temperature to a pressure not less than
1.5 times its specified maximum working pressure but not more than two-
fifths of its bursting pressure. The hose should be stencilled or otherwise
marked with the date of testing, its specified maximum working pressure and,
if used in services other than the ambient temperature services, its maximum
and minimum service temperature, as applicable. The specified maximum
working pressure should not be less than 10 bar gauge.
2.13 General
2.13.1 (a) All cargo tanks should be provided with a venting system
appropriate to the cargo being carried. Tank vent systems should
be so designed as to minimize the possibility of cargo vapour
accumulating about the decks, entering accommodation and
machinery spaces and, in the case of flammable vapours, other
spaces containing sources of ignition. They should also be
designed to minimize possible spraying onto the decks. Vent
outlets should be arranged to prevent entrance of water into the
cargo tanks, and, at the same time, should direct the vapour
discharge upwards in the form of unimpeded jets. Provision
should be made to ensure that the liquid head of any tank does
not exceed the test head of that tank; suitable high-level alarms,
overflow-control systems or spill valves, together with gauging
devices and tank filling procedures, may be accepted for this
purpose.
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BCH Code – Chapter II
2.13.2 For a tank equipped with closed or restricted gauging, the vent system
should be sized, allowing for flame screens, if fitted, to permit loading at the
design rate without overpressuring the tank. Specifically, under conditions in
which a saturated cargo vapour is discharged through the venting system at
the maximum anticipated loading rate, the pressure differential between the
cargo-tank vapour space and the atmosphere should not exceed 0.2 kp/cm2
or, for independent tanks, the maximum working pressure of the tank.
2.13.3 Any flame screens fitted to the discharge openings of vent systems
should be easily accessible and removable for cleaning.
*
Reference to the use of shutoff valves in the vent lines should be interpreted to extend to all
other means of stoppage, including spectacle blanks and blank flanges.
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BCH Code – Chapter II
for cargo segregation. In no case should shutoff valves be fitted either above
or below pressure/vacuum-relief valves but provision may be made for
bypassing the pressure/vacuum-relief valves under certain operating condi-
tions. The heights of vent exits should not be less than 4 m above the weather
deck or above the fore-and-aft gangway if fitted within 4 m of the gangway.
The vent height may be reduced to 3 m above the deck or fore-and-aft
gangway, as applicable, provided high-velocity vent valves of a type approved
by the Administration, directing the vapour–air mixture upwards in an
unimpeded jet with an exit velocity of at least 30 m/s, are fitted. The vent exits
should also be arranged at a distance of at least 10 m from the nearest air
intake or openings to accommodation and service spaces and ignition
sources. Flammable vapour outlets should be provided with readily renew-
able and effective flame screens or safety heads of an approved type. Due
attention should be paid in the design of PV valves, flame screens and vent
heads to the possibility of the blockage of these devices by the freezing of
cargo vapour or by icing up in adverse weather conditions.
2.14.4 Open gauging and restricted gauging should be allowed only when:
(b) means are provided for relieving tank pressure before the gauge
is operated.
*
See second paragraph of chapter VI on page 78.
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BCH Code – Chapter II
2.15 General
2.15.1 When provided, cargo heating or cooling systems should be
constructed, fitted and tested to the satisfaction of the Administration.
Materials used in the construction of temperature-control systems should be
suitable for use with the cargo to be carried.
2.15.2 Heating or cooling media should be approved for use with the specific
cargo. Consideration should be given to the surface temperature of heating
coils or ducts to avoid dangerous reactions from localized overheating of
cargo. See also 4.10.6.
2.15.5 (a) Means should be provided for measuring the cargo temperature.
When overheating or overcooling could result in a dangerous
condition, an alarm system which monitors the cargo tempera-
ture should be provided.
(b) The means for measuring the cargo temperature should be of
restricted or closed type, respectively, when a restricted or closed
gauging device is required for individual substances as shown in
column j of the summary of minimum requirements in chapter VI.
(c) A restricted temperature-measuring device is subject to the
definition for a restricted gauging device in 3.9(b), e.g., a portable
thermometer lowered inside a gauge tube of the restricted type.
(d) A closed temperature-measuring device is subject to the
definition for closed gauging device in 3.9(c), e.g., a remote-
reading thermometer of which the sensor is installed in the tank.
2.15.6 Where products with a significant toxic vapour hazard are being
heated or cooled, the heating or cooling medium should operate:
(a) in a circuit independent of other ship’s services, except for
another cargo heating or cooling system, and not enter the
engine-room; or
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BCH Code – Chapter II
G — MATERIALS OF CONSTRUCTION
2.17 General
2.17.1 Structural materials used for tank construction, together with
associated piping, pumps, valves, vents and their jointing materials, should
be suitable at the temperature and pressure for the cargo to be carried in
accordance with recognized standards. Steel is assumed to be the normal
material of construction.
*
Not applicable for ships built before 27 September 1979.
{
See second paragraph of chapter VI on page 78.
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BCH Code – Chapter II
2.19 General
2.19.1 Vapour spaces within cargo tanks, and in some cases spaces
surrounding cargo tanks, may require to have specially controlled atmo-
spheres.
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BCH Code – Chapter II
2.19.3 Arrangements required in connection with 2.19.2(a), (b) and (c) are:
(a) An adequate supply of inert gas for use in filling and discharging
should be carried or should be manufactured on board unless a
shore supply is available. In addition, sufficient inert gas should
be available on the ship to compensate for normal losses during
transportation.
(b) The inert gas system on board the ship should be able to
maintain at least 0.07 kp/cm2 pressure within the containment
system at all times. In addition, the inert gas system should not
raise the cargo-tank pressure to more than the tank’s relief-valve
setting.
(c) Where padding is used, similar arrangements for supply of the
padding medium should be made as required for inert gas in (a)
and (b) of this paragraph.
(d) Means should be provided for monitoring ullage spaces
containing a gas blanket to ensure that the correct atmosphere
is being maintained.
(e) Inerting and/or padding arrangements, where used with
flammable cargoes, should be such as to minimize the creation
of static electricity during the admission of the inerting media.
(f) Where drying is used and dry nitrogen is used as the medium,
similar arrangements for supply of the drying medium should be
made as required in (a), (b) and (e) above. Where drying agents
are used as the drying medium on all air inlets to the tank,
sufficient media should be carried for the duration of the voyage,
taking into consideration the diurnal temperature range and the
expected humidity.
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BCH Code – Chapter II
2.21.2 Filling of ballast in cargo tanks may be arranged from deck level by
pumps serving permanent ballast tanks, provided that the filling line has no
permanent connection to cargo tanks or piping and that nonreturn valves are
fitted.
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